Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

How Mary’s Prayer

Third time lucky as band shot to fame

- Gary Clark in the studio. BY GRAEME STRACHAN

DUNDEE band Danny Wilson struck gold at the third time of asking when Mary’s Prayer became a UK chart success in April 1988.

The line-up of brothers Gary and Kit Clark and their friend Ged Grimes were the band of the moment and became household names overnight.

They had achieved something very rare in the music industry: slow-burning success.

Danny Wilson grew out of Clark’s Commandos, which was formed by Gary and former classmate Ged when they left Dundee to seek fame and fortune in London.

Again, though, success proved elusive.

Gary and Ged returned to Dundee and decided to rethink the band’s sound and brought Kit onboard. They called themselves The Scots Porridge Notes.

The band raised money by busking in the Overgate and Murraygate during the summer and for crowds of Japanese and American tourists at the golfing mecca of St Andrews.

They became Spencer Tracy, after the Hollywood movie star, and began playing pubs and venues and recorded a demo tape that was constantly rejected by record labels.

Until everything changed. Music journalist Bob Flynn watched the band playing a gig in a bar in Edinburgh and wrote a review in music newspaper Melody Maker.

The review was so good that the band now had its choice of record labels.

Virgin Records won the day in July 1985 because of their sheer passion for the music and their willingnes­s to give the band complete artistic control.

They were obliged to change

their name after objections from Spencer Tracy’s estate and the new moniker came from the 1962 Frank Sinatra movie Meet Danny Wilson.

The band originally started recording the album Meet Danny Wilson at PUK Studios in Denmark and spent the weeks up until Christmas 1986 finishing it off in New York.

Howard Gray was producing the first half of the album at PUK and played I Only Have Eyes For You, the 1985 album by Lester Bowie’s Brass Fantasy, through the speakers “as an example of how great this process could sound”.

The band fell head over heels in love with the music.

By sheer coincidenc­e, Bowie’s Brass Fantasy were playing Copenhagen when Danny Wilson were still in Denmark and they went to the gig and spoke to Bowie afterwards.

The great St Louis trumpeter was so taken with them that he agreed to collaborat­e on the album and invited the band to their studio in Brooklyn.

But there was just one snag. With no money to make the trip to the States for the recording sessions because of budget restrictio­ns, the band went to the very top: Virgin supremo Richard Branson.

After hearing an impromptu performanc­e in his office, Branson agreed to give the trio free flights in return for entertaini­ng the Virgin Atlantic passengers in mid-air.

Mary’s Prayer was released as the first single in February 1987.

The initial UK release in February 1987 peaked at number 86, although the single became a success in the US, where it reached number 23 in the summer of 1987.

A UK re-release following the US success only got to number 42 in the singles chart.

The album generated two more singles, released in July and November 1987 and called Davy and A Girl I Used To Know, which disappoint­ingly failed to break into the top 80.

Danny Wilson supported Simply Red in the US and Canada in autumn 1987 where they were achieving the kind of recognitio­n they deserved in the UK.

After being steadfastl­y ignored on two previous occasions, the single was brought out again in March 1988.

At Christmas 1987, Radio 1 held a show in which listeners voted for the song they reckoned should have been a hit in 1987

but missed out. Mary’s Prayer won. Virgin decided to give it a final push.

Mary’s Prayer rose to 52 and 35 before reaching number 15 on April 23 1988 following appearance­s on Top Of The Pops and Terry Wogan’s primetime BBC TV chat show.

The single peaked at number three on April 30 1988.

Dundee now had a group with a hit record for the first time since Billy Mackenzie and The Associates achieved success with Party Fears Two in 1982.

A second album, Bebop Moptop, was released the following year, featuring the singles Never Gonna Be The Same and The Second Summer Of Love, which reached number 23.

The band split up amicably in 1991 and decided to pursue individual interests.

 ?? ?? BIG TIME: The Dundee band-mates enjoy the limelight in London.
BIG TIME: The Dundee band-mates enjoy the limelight in London.
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DannyWilso­nattheheig­htoftheirf­amebefores­plittingin­1991.

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